Additional changes during the process of isolating TomP2P. High-level
changes include:
- Beginning to break up the monolithic MessageFacade into modular
repository classes, starting with the OfferRepository interface and
its TomP2P implementation
- Major refactoring of the CreateOfferCoordinator class, eliminating
the never-completely-implemented resume logic. This class still needs
quite a bit of work, but it's now considerably simpler than it was
- Refactoring the Node and BootstrapNode types for greater clarity and
ease of use
- Most classes that use the net.tomp2p API have been moved into tomp2p
subpackages, e.g. io.bitsquare.offer.tomp2p. Classes within have been
made package private wherever possible.
- The Guice module structure has evolved. For example, note the
relationship between offer.OfferModule and offer.tomp2p.TomP2POfferModule,
and note how the latter is consumed by app.AppModule. This arrangement
provides for clear contracts as to what is required to assemble a
functioning Bitsquare application, while allowing implementation-specific
modules to be swapped in and out with ease and still allowing
implementation-specific classes to remain package-private.
See extended commit comments for further details.
* wip-cbeams:
Rename io.bitsquare.{Abstract=>}BitsquareModule
Move io.bitsquare.{network=>util}.tomp2p.BaseFutureUtil
Introduce app.gui.MainModule
Optimize imports
Introduce io.bitsquare.msg.tomp2p package
Introduce io.bitsquare.offer.tomp2p package
Extract isSuccess(BaseFuture) method into util class
Remove offer creation recovery from CreateOfferCoordinator
Remove unused MessageFacade from CreateOfferCoordinator
Inline BroadCastOfferFeeTx#run into CreateOfferCoordinator
Inline CreateOfferFeeTx#run into CreateOfferCoordinator
Replace VerifyOffer class with Offer#validate method
Inline CreateOfferCoordinator#onFailed
Rename methods used to implement *Handler lambdas
Rename *Handler methods
Move generic *Handler types to new util.task package
Replace AddOfferListener Result/Fault handlers
Introduce OfferRepository interface and TomP2P impl
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| doc | ||
| gradle/wrapper | ||
| package | ||
| src | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .travis.yml | ||
| build.gradle | ||
| gradlew | ||
| gradlew.bat | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| README.md | ||
What is Bitsquare?
Bitsquare is a cross-platform desktop application that allows users to trade fiat money (dollars, euros, etc) for bitcoin without relying on centralized exchanges such as Coinbase, Bitstamp or (the former) Mt. Gox.
By running Bitsquare on their local machines, users form a peer-to-peer network. Offers to buy and sell bitcoin are broadcast to that network, and through the process of offering and accepting these trades via the Bitsquare UI, a market is established.
There are no central points of control or failure in the Bitsquare network. There are no trusted third parties. When two parties agree to trade fiat money for bitcoin, the bitcoin to be bought or sold is held in escrow using multisignature transaction capabilities native to the bitcoin protocol.
Because the fiat money portion of any trade must be transferred via traditional means such as a wire transfer, Bitsquare incorporates first-class support for human arbitration to resolve any errors or disputes.
You can read about all of this and more in the overview, whitepaper, arbitration and risk analysis documents. Several screencasts are available as well.
Status
The team is currently working on a series of pre-releases on the way to version 1.0. See the roadmap for details.
Alpha testers welcome! Please see the instructions for alpha testing, where you'll find detailed information about downloading and using our native installers, building from source and more.
Staying in Touch
Contact the team and keep up to date using any of the following:
- The Bitsquare Website
- The #bitsquare IRC channel on Freenode (logs)
- Our mailing list
- @bitsquare_ on Twitter
- Get in contact with us
- GitHub Issues
License
Bitsquare is free software, licensed under version 3 of the GNU Affero General Public License.
In short, this means you are free to fork this repository and do anything with it that you please. However, if you distribute your changes, i.e. create your own build of the software and make it available for others to use, you must:
- Publish your changes under the same license, so as to ensure the software remains free.
- Use a name and logo substantially different than "Bitsquare" and the Bitsquare logo seen here. This allows for competition without confusion.
See LICENSE for complete details.